Cathardincu
Surprisingly incoherent and boring
AniInterview
Sorry, this movie sucks
Tayloriona
Although I seem to have had higher expectations than I thought, the movie is super entertaining.
Staci Frederick
Blistering performances.
Hitchcoc
I can't help but imagine these "Old House" movies weren't decidedly tongue in cheek. Bela Lugosi, in typical fashion, is given a role that doesn't stretch him at all. The poor guy was barely making enough to live. He had one of the best marquee presences in the film world, but once Dracula was made he was sort of cast as a mere threat. There are greats scenes of secret doorways and people sneaking around in the gardens outside the house. We have a fellow who is stabbing people who goes by the name of The Maniac. In the house is a scientist who is trying to find a way to put people in suspended animation. And, of course, at the center is a young, sort of obnoxious man who is taken with the fiancee of the scientist. This is actually better than most of these kinds of movies.
calvinnme
A dark house chiller from Columbia with all of the usual ingredients - serial nutso killer running loose (called "The Maniac" by newspaper headlines), an isolated house in the countryside, with a (constantly) screaming heroine, mysterious servants, one liking to peer into crystal balls and go into trances and make proclamations of death coming soon, a wiseguy newspaper reporter who bursts out gleefully "Boy, what a story" every time another dead body turns up and a hard nose detective who doesn't have a clue.Oh, yes, "comedy relief" is supplied by a black chauffeur who gets scared really easily. When asked what he would do if he met "The Maniac," the chauffeur replies, "I would become famous. I would become the first man to fly without wings." (Truth is, that might be the best line of dialogue in the film).These kind of films are easy to poke fun at and also, on occasion, fun, if you happen to like this kind of film genre (which I do).This particular film benefits, though, from a pretty good cast, with Bela Lugosi top billed over the title. Bela plays Degar, a manservant, dressed all in black, including a black turban. Oh, he's mysterious alright, in that ominous Lugosi way, but is he just a red herring? He has a sister, Sika (played by Mary Frey in her only film role), and she's even spookier. She's the one going into trances (yes, at one moment in this film they do have a seance with Sika the star of the show). Guess what? One of the participants holding hands at the table won't make it through the seance without a knife in the back.It's pretty Sally Blane (Loretta Young's sister) as the screamer and Wallace Ford as the reporter with the snappy one liners and an overly pleased manner whenever a new corpse turns up. There's also Tully Marshall as the owner of the mansion (Bela keeps calling him "Master"). I remembered Tully getting knocked off in the silent version of the similar Cat and the Canary and kept counting the minutes before his character would do the same in this one."The Maniac" (who carries an oversized knife) keeps popping up throughout this film, peering through bushes with a scarred face and demented smile full of sharp teeth, climbing through windows and, generally, keeping everyone on their toes, until he lays a few of them out at their feet, that is.Night of Terror does have a bit of originality with one of the occupants of the house, a scientist (George Meeker) who plans on having himself buried alive in a coffin on their property in an experiment to see if, with an antidote administered eight hours later, he will still be alive. Fun kid. Needless to say, things don't go as expected, but the writing here at least fooled me a little. Nuff said.Night of Terror can be found if you scrounge around the internet - there's a chopped up version in installments on You Tube, but you're probably better to go to dailymotion.com for a one hour version of this thriller. So far not even Alpha Video has bothered with this one.
lugonian
NIGHT OF TERROR (Columbia, 1933), directed by Benjamin Stoloff, being one of many contributions to the horror film mysteries attributed to Universal's cycle that all began with Dracula (1931) starring Bela Lugosi, stars that legendary Hungarian actor in an interesting horror/ murder mystery commonly produced at that time. Though not the best nor worst of this type, NIGHT OF TERROR has become one of the most neglected and least known of the forgotten thrillers due to lack of availability, even with the Lugosi name above the title.As the credits roll through the caption of a crystal ball with performers credited solely by their character names rather than the traditional actors and their roles billing, the story opens during the midnight hours with full moon in background view as a crazed bearded lunatic in dark suit and hat known as The Maniac (Edwin Maxwell) commits his latest killing on a young couple inside a car, leaving a note behind, the twelfth murder to occur which has both police and reporters baffled. The Maniac soon prowls onto the Rinehart estate where he hides himself about the home until it's time to resume with his uncontrollable urge to kill and kill again. At the estate are: Richard Rinehart (Tully Marshall), whose nephew, Arthur Hornsby (George Meeker), a scientist experimenting on a fluid injection he intends on using while buried alive inside a coffin for eight solid hours with the intent on using to help save lives on those trapped in cave-ins or submarines. Although Hornsby is engaged to marry Mary Rinehart (Sally Blane), she's become the sole attention of Tom Hardy (Wallace Ford), a newspaper reporter; Richard's brother, John (Bryant Washburn), and his wife, Sarah (Gertrude Michael, surname billed as Michaels). There's also Degar (Bela Lugosi), a Hindu and 15 year servant for the Rineharts; Sika (Mary Frey), a housekeeper/psychic who performs séances; Martin (Oscar Smith), a Negro chauffeur who claims he would be "the first man to fly without wings" when approached by The Maniac. Upon Richard's murder, and the last will and testament having him leaving his entire fortune to his servants rather than his immediate family, it soon becomes "death among the heirs" while, at the same time, Hornsby going on with his experiment from beyond the grave, much to the dismay of a harassed Detective Bailey (Matt McHugh) called upon to investigate with his partner, Detective Dooley (Richard Powell).During its slow-pacing and bit confusing 64 minutes, NIGHT OF TERROR is actually two separate stories rolled into one. The phantom killer resembling that to Fredric March's evil half from DR. JEKYLL AND MR. HYDE (Paramount, 1931) acquires more of interest than to a dull scientist's experiment being buried alive to prove his theory and invented serum effective. Although Bela Lugosi could have played either one of those character roles more favorably, his Hindu servant with turban and earring on right ear addressing his employer, "Yes, Master," gathers enough attention in spite of being basically secondary. Sally Blane, Loretta Young's look-a-like sister, does her part with her occasional screams, with one harrowing scene where she's abducted by an approaching hand from behind the wall.Regardless of being produced by Columbia, NIGHT OF TERROR looks more like something from "poverty row" Monogram Studios from the 1940s, right down from the stalking phantom-ish Mr. Hyde in the resembling manner of Fredric March's evil half from DR. JEKYLL AND MR. HYDE (Paramount, 1931), to the surprise finish recycled in some ways for Lugosi's Monogram cheapie of THE APE MAN (1943). Watch for it.With the Maniac as part of the story process, and no real background to whom he is and why, NIGHT OF TERROR rightfully deserves its contribution in the horror film cycle. Unseen on commercial television since the mid 1960s, and never distributed to video cassette, NIGHT OF TERROR has turned up decades later onto DVD as well as broadcasts on cable television's GET-TV (with commercial breaks) in October 2015 in commemoration of Halloween. Regardless of Leonard Maltin's "BOMB" rating critique found in his "Movies on TV-Video Guide" NIGHT OF TERROR is worthy of rediscovery and something to consider for avid fans of bad cinema at best. (**).
wdbasinger
If I were going to list the ten best films Bela Lugosi appeared in, this would be one of them. This film has everything, including sliding panels, secret tunnels, mysterious visitors, sudden and horrifying killings, a seance where a murder occurs, bizarre characters, bizarre behavior such as the clipping of newspapers on the bodies of victims, and a rampaging misanthrope called The Maniac with a distorted, hair-raising face that would frighten the proverbial "boogieman". The bizarre ending in which the true murderer is revealed is a delight. (I won't reveal it here). Also the last scene in which The Maniac comes back to life is classic.10 out of 10.Dan Basinger